Magnesium Sulphate (Epsom Salts)

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Size: 1kg
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Sale price$10.00 Regular price$12.00

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Description

Magnesium Sulphate (Epsom Salts) are A must-have for addressing magnesium deficiency and promoting lush, healthy plant growth.

Magnesium Sulphate, commonly known as Epsom Salts, is a natural and effective solution to combat magnesium deficiency in soil. Essential for photosynthesis, magnesium plays a vital role in plant health, ensuring vibrant greenery and eliminating yellowing in leaves. Perfect for use in gardens, landscapes, and container plants, it supports the growth of acid-loving plants like gardenias, azaleas, and citrus.

  • Corrects Magnesium Deficiency: Eliminates yellowing between leaf veins, primarily in older leaves.
  • Boosts Photosynthesis: Magnesium is essential for photosynthesis, enabling plants to thrive.
  • Prevents Leaf Drop: Helps stop curling leaf margins and prevents premature leaf shedding.
  • Versatile Use: Ideal for acid-loving plants, tomatoes, and citrus trees.
  • Plant Vigor Enhancement: Strengthens plants, leading to lush, healthy foliage.

Typical Analysis

  • Magnesium Sulphate: MgSO₄·7H₂O (99.5% minimum)
  • Magnesium (Mg): 9.8% minimum as sulphate
  • Sulphur (S): 13% minimum as sulphate

Application Instructions

  • Garden Beds: Apply 20–30g per square meter and water thoroughly.
  • Potted Plants: Dissolve 1 teaspoon in 4 liters of water and use as a foliar spray or soil drench.
  • Tomatoes & Citrus: Apply around the base of plants at the start of the growing season for optimal results.

Repeat applications as needed to maintain plant health.

Why You Should Buy

  • Restore Plant Health: Quickly corrects visible symptoms of magnesium deficiency, ensuring vigorous growth.
  • Easy to Use: Simple application methods suitable for gardens, landscapes, and container plants.
  • All-Natural Solution: A safe and effective way to enhance plant health without harsh chemicals.
  • Acid-Loving Plants’ Best Friend: Especially beneficial for gardenias, azaleas, and citrus trees.

FAQs

What is Magnesium Sulphate (Epsom Salts), exactly?
A naturally occurring mineral salt (MgSO₄·7H₂O) that supplies two essentials: magnesium (about 9.8%) and sulphur (about 13%). It dissolves easily in water and is great for quickly correcting magnesium shortfalls.

What problems does Magnesium Sulphate actually fix in plants?
Classic magnesium deficiency—yellowing between the veins on older leaves, leaf margins curling, and sluggish photosynthesis. Give plants a hit of Mg and they can green back up fast.

Which plants benefit most?
Anything showing Mg deficiency can benefit. Citrus, tomatoes/peppers/chillies, roses, gardenias, azaleas and other acid-lovers are common candidates. If they’re already getting enough Mg, you won’t see a benefit.

Will Magnesium Sulphate cure blossom end rot on tomatoes or capsicums?
Nope. Blossom end rot is a calcium uptake problem, not magnesium. Epsom salts won’t fix it and overdoing Mg can make calcium uptake worse.

Does Magnesium Sulphate change soil pH?
Effectively pH-neutral in use. Don’t count on it to acidify or sweeten soil—use proper pH amendments for that job.

How do I apply Magnesium Sulphate in garden beds?
Broadcast 20–30 g per square metre and water in well. Repeat only if symptoms persist.

What’s the dilution for pots and houseplants?
Dissolve 1 teaspoon in 4 litres of water. Use as a soil drench or a light foliar spray.

How often should I use Magnesium Sulphate?
Only as needed. For an active deficiency, apply once, then reassess in 2–3 weeks. If the plant greens up, stop. This is a supplement, not a weekly ritual.

Foliar spray or soil drench—what’s better?
Foliar gives the quickest cosmetic response; soil drench supports longer-term Mg availability. Do a gentle foliar at first, then follow with a soil drench if the deficiency is real.

Can I use Magnesium Sulphate in hydroponics?
Yes. Target roughly 25–50 ppm of elemental magnesium from Epsom salts. As a guide, ~2.5 g in 10 L adds ~25 ppm Mg; ~5 g in 10 L adds ~50 ppm. Mix thoroughly until fully dissolved.

Any mix/compatibility warnings for hydro or fertigation?
Don’t put Epsom salts in the same concentrated stock tank as calcium nitrate or you’ll make gypsum flakes that clog lines. Keep sulphate salts and calcium salts in separate A/B tanks and dilute at the point of injection.

Will Magnesium Sulphate help yellow leaves on my citrus?
If the yellowing is interveinal on older leaves (textbook Mg deficiency), yes. If the issue is new growth paling, iron deficiency, overwatering, root trouble, or general underfeeding, look elsewhere.

Can I overdose Magnesium Sulphate? What does that look like?
Yes. Overuse can cause salt stress and nutrient antagonism (plants struggle to take up calcium and potassium). Leaves may scorch, growth can stall. More isn’t better—treat, then stop.

Is Magnesium Sulphate a complete fertiliser?
No. It only supplies magnesium and sulphur. Keep using your balanced fertilisers/organic feeds for N-P-K and the rest.

Does Magnesium Sulphate deter pests or kill weeds?
No. That’s garden folklore. It won’t control insects, diseases, or weeds.

What’s the difference between Magnesium Sulphate and Kieserite (magnesium sulphate monohydrate)?
Both supply Mg and S. Kieserite (~14% Mg) is a slower, soil-applied granular; Epsom salts are the fast-dissolving heptahydrate, ideal for quick correction and foliar/hydro use.

How soon should I see results?
With a real Mg deficiency, foliar applications can green leaves within a week or two. Soil drenches take a bit longer. If nothing changes, the problem likely isn’t magnesium.

Is Magnesium Sulphate safe for edible gardens?
Used as directed, yes. It’s a common horticultural salt. Don’t ingest it and keep the bag away from kids and pets.

Can I use Magnesium Sulphate on lawns?
You can, but only if a deficiency is confirmed. It won’t replace nitrogen for greening. If you do apply, use sparingly and water in well.

Will Magnesium Sulphate help my roses bloom more?
Only if Mg is limiting. If they’re short on water, phosphorus, or overall fertility, Epsom salts won’t boost flowers.

What’s the best way to dissolve Magnesium Sulphate?
It’s highly soluble—stir into warm water for quicker dissolve, then top up with cool water. Always mix until fully clear before spraying or dosing systems.

Can I mix Magnesium Sulphate with other liquids for foliar sprays?
Yes, at low rates, but avoid mixing with calcium-containing products in the same tank. If in doubt, jar test first and spray in the cool of the day.

How much should I use around tomatoes and citrus in soil?
Light touch only: 20–30 g/m² in beds or 1 tsp in 4 L for a soil drench if deficiency signs are present. Don’t keep reapplying “just because.”

Is Magnesium Sulphate okay for indoor tropicals and aroids?
Yes, if you’ve got confirmed Mg deficiency (older leaves yellow between the veins). Use the 1 tsp/4 L drench sparingly and watch the plant.

Storage tips?
Keep it sealed, cool, and dry. It’s hygroscopic and will clump if left open. If it cakes, it still works—just break it up and dissolve fully.

Shelf life?
Indefinite if stored dry and sealed. It doesn’t “go off.”

Any signs I should not use Epsom salts?
If a recent soil test shows adequate/high magnesium, skip it. If you’re battling blossom end rot, inconsistent watering, or alkaline pH issues—this isn’t the fix.

What size is Magnesium Sulphate and what’s inside the bag?
This is a 1 kg bag of high-purity magnesium sulphate heptahydrate crystals (Epsom salts)—nothing else added.

Quick troubleshooting checklist before you reach for the bag:

  1. Check symptoms (older leaves yellow between veins? likely Mg).
  2. Consider watering, pH, and overall feeding first.
  3. If still pointing to Mg deficiency, apply once at the recommended rate and reassess.

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